Archive for January, 2008

I’m a little nervous about posting this… Quagmire is still very immature, and I don’t want expectations set too high. There is still a lot to do! But, the good news is, you can easily help set the direction.

I suppose I will set up a Google group for Quagmire eventually. What do you think? Meanwhile, edit the Quagmire wiki with your questions, comments, and ideas.

One thing I like about Emacs is that when I ask for information, the default case is that it is displayed in a section (which Emacs calls a “window”) of the window (which Emacs calls a “frame”) that I’m already focused on. What’s nice about this is that if I ask for, say, help on a symbol in C mode, the information will show up, but I don’t have to look away, or worry about a new window stealing the focus, or move the mouse around. Also, I can easily dismiss the display without moving my hands from the keyboard.

Do you know about help on symbol in C mode? I didn’t know about this until last week. If you are in a C mode buffer, you can type C-h S, aka info-lookup-symbol, to look up help for a given C symbol. This works by digging through the libc info pages… this isn’t perfect, but it is pretty handy. (And, yes, I’m one of the few people who really loves info and uses it every day. I wish all the documentation on my system were available in this format — plus one or two others, yet to be invented, which would allow better IDE-ish features in Emacs.)

On a related note, a couple days Kevin Ryde sent me the latest version of gtk-look.el for uploading into ELPA. I’ve been meaning to try this for a while, so I finally installed it. gtk-lookup-symbol is similar to info-lookup-symbol, except it uses the devhelp documentation libraries as its source. Great stuff!

Naturally, I could just use devhelp, which is a very nice tool. Unfortunately, it is a very nice tool with one major drawback — it makes a new window, with all the attendant problems. And, by default, gtk-look suffers from this problem as well; the docs show up in firefox.

Luckily, Emacs is absurdly configurable, and this problem is solved by installing the w3m-el package (on Fedora) and configuring browse-url-browser-function to display devhelp files in w3m:

A couple weeks ago we had to euthanize our dog Liver. She had a brain tumor and was in a lot of distress.

As those of you who met her will know, Liver was a high-strung and difficult dog; it’s appropriate that she’s wearing her muzzle in the only photo I have to hand.

Now, though, is not the time to discuss Liver’s deficiencies. Despite her fears and consequent overuse of the fang, she had many of the qualities that bind people so closely to their dogs: enthusiasm, boundless joie de vive, eagerness to please, and unquestioning loyalty. Like many dalmatians, she was a clown (if often by mistake); and she is the only dog I’ve met who would come give me attention if I was crying — as if she understood.

This was billed as a romantic comedy and, knowing nothing else about it, we went to see it over the holidays. I don’t think I’ve ever cried this much during a comedy, not even Talladega Nights. It really wasn’t what I was expecting at all… I was in the mood for light escapism.

Not quite as bad as when the video clerk told us that Donnie Darko was a funny movie about a teenage superhero, but bad enough.